Here are the no-PC-needed rules for guessing
at SO50 and ECHO while mobile near 30N latitude:
ECHO's windows are constant at 830 to 1330 AM
and 8PM to just after midnight daily. If you have
a good pass early in the window, you will get one
or two more 100 minutes later each. If you get
one in the morning, you will get one 11 hours and
10 minutes later that evening. For any given pass
today, you will probably get one tomorrow 45
minutes earlier or 1 hour later.
For SO50, the windows are *now* 6 to 10 AM and
9PM to midnight:30 but this moves earlier by
21 minutes a day. Pass to pass is 100 minuutes,
morning window to night window is 14 Hrs 10 min
(morning to night), but as the current night
window moves much earlier, we will be calling
it the "first window" and then it will be only
10 hrs 20 minutes to a pass in the next window.
Day to day, a pass will be either 47 minutes later
or 65 minutes earlier.
These may sound tedious, but with a pencil and
some scribbles in the log while mobile, you can
easily guess when to QSY to make a mobile
satellite pass...
When I travel on long trips in the summer and
will be playing radio, I find this easier to manage
than trying to dig out a laptop in the car and
try to get precise times.
de Wb4APR, Bob
>>> Robert Bruninga 09/01/05 5:53 PM >>>
Since most cell phones, and 2way repeaters and
most other infrastructure in the disaster area
are out, and even some of those on emergency
power now are starting to die due to lack of fuel,
I wonder if would be appropriate for the ECHO
and SO50 (which can be used mobile FM), to be
declared for emergency and priority traffic
only for a few days for the South Central USA?
Simply have a few well endowed stations to
start operating as a net-control and take organized
traffic from stations with emergency or priority
traffic in the Southern LA and MISS areas.
If the first net control does not fully cover the area,
then he can ask for "an alternate net control
in the direction of the satellite travel" to hand it
over too.
Are there any other sleeper satelites that can be
activated for mobile FM commmunications in this
area?
Just a thought. I'll work up the simple pass-timings
for non-PC use of ECHO and SO50... de WB4APR, Bob
>>> Robert Bruninga 09/01/05 4:57 PM >>>
USING APRS SATELLITES IN DISASTER AREAS:
DISCLAIMER:
This document is NOT a receommendation to
use APRS via ISS in a disaster. There are many
other Ham Radio Communications capabilities that
are better under any given circumstances.
This document was only written to tell "HOW"
to use APRS and packet via ISS for emergency
operations in a disaster area,*IF* such use
was necessary for a given emergent need.
---------------------------------------------------------
This email describes how to use the ARISS and
possibly PCSAT2 system (on ISS) for tracking and
communicating with APRS assets in the Hurricane
affected areas. It covers 3 topics:
1) Knowing when the ISS is in view without a PC
2) Settings for ISS and PCSAT2 digipeater
3) How to send an Email from your APRS or
D7 or D700 APRS mobile/HT or normal packet.
KNOWING WHEN ISS IS IN VIEW:
DAILY 1: At 30 deg latitude (New Orleans),
you will get two contact window periods a day
and each period will give you 2 or 3 pass
opportunities. Today these Windows are 7-10 PM
and 2-6 AM daylight time (applies everwhere at
this N.latitude).
DAILY 2: If you hear a pass early in a window,
then you will hear another one 97 minutes later.
And if lucky, another 97 minutes after that.
DAILY 3: Similarly, if you hear a good pass during
the first window, then you will hear another good
pass in the second window exactly 8 hours
(and 2 mins) later.
NEXT DAY: If you hear a pass on ONE day, then
you will hear another one the NEXT day 27 mins
LATER. (AND/OR 68 minutes EARLIER.)
MULTI-DAY: For longer range multi-day planning,
these "window-periods" slide EARLIER by 22
minutes per day (but the exact times follow
only the "daily" rules above")
WIth these simple rules and keeping a log of
when you hear ISS passes on your dashboard,
it is easy to predict future passes and operating
times for weeks or longer. You can work up
simple plans like this for ECHO, SO50 and any
other satellite.
NEW-START: If you are starting new, then all you
have to do is monitor continuously during one
of the windows until you do hear a pass, and
from then on, you can figure your own schedule.
Just remember to slide the window earlier by
22 minutes per day from the times above for
1 Sept.
SETTINGS: There are two digital assets on ISS
and both digipeat using the path of "VIA ARISS"
ARISS: 145.800 down, 145.99 up
PCSAT2: 435.275 +/- 10 Khz, 145.825 up
Use ARISS in the disaster area and mobile
since it is 10 dB stronger, has 9 dB less path
loss on the downlink to other omni's, has more
IGate stations and has no appreciable Doppler.
PBBS: If you have a portable cross band beam
antenna, and can remember to TRACK ISS, and
point the beam, and tune the downlink for Doppler,
then you are welcome to use the PCSAT2 BBS for
longer paragraph type trafffic, though you
must remember that maintainig a "connection"
via a satellite is problematic at best. The PBBS
callsign is MAIL.
Only USA STATIONS IN the disaster area
should logon to the BBS with emergency
or priority traffic. No other USA stations should
attempt to use the BBS for ANY purpose even
emergency or priority traffic to or from someone
in the disaster area.
Instead, Let stations in other parts of the world
be the gateways for downloading any such traffic.
or sending back replies.
EMAIL: APRS is a one-line message system.
But you can send email if you can fit the email
address and text in the same line. ANyone
can do this via ISS using the APRS protocol
if they have either an APRS system, a D7 walkie
talkie or a D700 mobile, or even a simple radio/TNC.
EMAIL FROM APRS, D7 or D700:
- Set your path to go via ARISS
- Send the message line TO "email"
- Make the first part of the message be the
email address and then enter your very brief
email text continuing on the same message line.
For any TNC or packet system, simply make
the AX.25 address be APRS and send the
packet as a UI digipeated packet via ARISS.
If you are successful via ISS, your radio will
display "MY MESSAGE" to confirm the packet
got digipeted. If it did, then cancel the
remaining message retries to reduce QRM.
Do not expect a message ack.
EMAIL FROM ANY PACKET SYSTEM:
To do this you must make your packet look
like an APRS message packet:
- Set your UNPROTO APRS VIA ARISS
- Go to converse
- Type :EMAILssss:eeee at eee.eee.eee text
Where the four "ssss" are four spaces
Where eeee at eee.eee.eee is the email address
Where text is your text.
If you see it digipeated, then your email will
probably be successful. If not, you have
to type the whole thing again, error free
to try again.
CONCLUSION:
This document is *NOT* a recommendation to
use APRS via ISS in a disaster. There are many
other Ham Radio Communications capabilities that
are better under any given circumstances.
This document was only written to tell "HOW"
to use APRS and packet via ISS for emergency
operations in a disaster area, *IF* such use had
any immediate application.
But in any case, unattended packet beacons via
ISS are NEVER welcome and especially over the
USA at this time.
This email is provided for what-it-is-worth, and
is not endorsed nor approved by ARISS at this
time. I just thought it would be useful to have
it as a baseline...
de Wb4APR, Bob
US Naval Academy
PCSAT2 Grond station
----
Sent via amsat-bb at amsat.org. Opinions expressed are those of the author.
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